“Fit for Purpose?” Assessing the Ecological Fit of the Social Institutions that Globally Govern Antimicrobial Resistance

Isaac Weldon, Steven J. Hoffman
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Abstract

Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is a natural process where microbes develop the ability to survive the antimicrobial drugs we depend upon to treat and prevent deadly infections, such as antibiotics. This microscopic evolution is further propelled by human activities, where each use of an antimicrobial drug potentially induces AMR. As microbes can spread quickly from animals to humans and travel around the world through humanity’s global circuits of movement, the use of any antimicrobial drug has potentially global consequences. As human-induced AMR occurs, mortality and morbidity increase due to increasingly or sometimes completely ineffective antimicrobial treatments. This article considers AMR as a product of the evolving and complex interplay between human societies and invisible microbial worlds. It argues that as a political challenge, AMR requires robust institutions that can manage human–microbial interactions to minimize the emergence of drug resistance and maximize the likelihood of achieving effective antimicrobial use for all. Yet, current governance systems for AMR are ill-equipped to meet these goals. We propose a conceptual paradigm shift for global AMR governance efforts, arguing that global governance could better address AMR if approached as a socioecological problem in need of sustainable management rather than solely as a medical problem to be solved. In biodiversity governance, institutions are designed to fit the biological features of the ecosystems that they are attempting to manage. We consider how a similar approach can improve global AMR governance. Employing the concept of ecological fit, which is defined as the alignment between human social systems and biological ecosystems, we diagnose 18 discrepancies between the social institutions that currently govern AMR and the ecological nature of this problem. Drawing from lessons learned in biodiversity governance, the article proposes five institutional design principles for improving the fit and effectiveness of global AMR governance.
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"适合目的?评估全球抗菌药耐药性管理社会机构的生态契合度
抗菌药耐药性(AMR)是一个自然过程,在这个过程中,微生物发展出在我们赖以治疗和预防致命感染的抗菌药(如抗生素)中生存的能力。人类活动进一步推动了这种微观进化,每次使用抗菌药物都有可能诱发 AMR。由于微生物可以迅速从动物传播到人类,并通过人类的全球移动线路在世界各地传播,因此任何抗菌药物的使用都可能产生全球性后果。随着人类引起的 AMR 的发生,死亡率和发病率也会增加,原因是抗菌治疗越来越无效,有时甚至完全无效。本文认为,AMR 是人类社会与无形微生物世界之间不断发展的复杂相互作用的产物。文章认为,作为一项政治挑战,AMR 需要强有力的机构来管理人类与微生物之间的相互作用,以最大限度地减少耐药性的出现,并最大限度地提高所有人有效使用抗微生物药物的可能性。然而,当前的 AMR 治理体系并不具备实现这些目标的条件。我们为全球 AMR 治理工作提出了一个概念范式转变,认为如果将 AMR 作为一个需要可持续管理的社会生态问题来处理,而不是仅仅作为一个需要解决的医学问题来处理,全球治理就能更好地应对 AMR。在生物多样性治理中,机构的设计要符合其试图管理的生态系统的生物特征。我们考虑如何采用类似的方法来改善全球 AMR 治理。生态契合的概念被定义为人类社会系统与生物生态系统之间的契合,我们利用这一概念诊断了目前治理 AMR 的社会机构与这一问题的生态性质之间的 18 项差异。文章借鉴生物多样性治理的经验教训,提出了五项制度设计原则,以提高全球 AMR 治理的契合度和有效性。
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